OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

The crypto industry’s largest NFT Marketplace platform OpenSea has come up with several solutions to the problem of freezing stolen NFTs.
OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

OpenSea has long been criticized for many outstanding problems that remain unresolved, such as stealing art copyrights to release NFTs or NFT hacks.

When an account’s NFT is stolen, OpenSea freezes the user’s account for purchasing the stolen NFT, even though the buyer may not know that the NFT has been hacked. Buyers will both lose the money spent to buy NFT and have their accounts unreasonably suspended.

In a series of Twitter posts on the morning of August 11, the platform’s representatives announced the latest proposals to solve the above problem.

US law prohibits the sale and transaction of stolen assets, so the exchange will be forced to seal all NFTs reported as stolen by hackers. To prevent users from being unjustly frozen, OpenSea recommends that users report the theft to the police so that the exchange can verify the information and recover it.

However, the reaction of most of the comments under the post was disapproving. The most obvious reason is that not all users of the exchange are US citizens, and can apply for a certificate of property theft easily within 7 days. Not to mention having to explain to the police what an NFT is and whether or not the law recognizes the NFT as property.

OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

Some users have suggested that the easiest and most logical thing that OpenSea can do is to block transactions within 24 hours of transferred assets without fees, because they could fall into the category of suspected hacking, thereby giving the victim time to report.

On August 10, OpenSea also posted a new update that addresses the issue of copying someone else’s NFT and redistribution, aka copymint.

The exchange also claims to be able to resolve up to 90% of verification requests in just 1 hour, as well as detect and remove NFTs that copy others within 2 hours of reporting.

DISCLAIMER: The Information on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to do your own research before investing.

Join CoinCu Telegram to keep track of news: https://t.me/coincunews

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Harold

CoinCu News

OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

The crypto industry’s largest NFT Marketplace platform OpenSea has come up with several solutions to the problem of freezing stolen NFTs.
OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

OpenSea has long been criticized for many outstanding problems that remain unresolved, such as stealing art copyrights to release NFTs or NFT hacks.

When an account’s NFT is stolen, OpenSea freezes the user’s account for purchasing the stolen NFT, even though the buyer may not know that the NFT has been hacked. Buyers will both lose the money spent to buy NFT and have their accounts unreasonably suspended.

In a series of Twitter posts on the morning of August 11, the platform’s representatives announced the latest proposals to solve the above problem.

US law prohibits the sale and transaction of stolen assets, so the exchange will be forced to seal all NFTs reported as stolen by hackers. To prevent users from being unjustly frozen, OpenSea recommends that users report the theft to the police so that the exchange can verify the information and recover it.

However, the reaction of most of the comments under the post was disapproving. The most obvious reason is that not all users of the exchange are US citizens, and can apply for a certificate of property theft easily within 7 days. Not to mention having to explain to the police what an NFT is and whether or not the law recognizes the NFT as property.

OpenSea Proposes A Solution To Get Back Stolen NFT

Some users have suggested that the easiest and most logical thing that OpenSea can do is to block transactions within 24 hours of transferred assets without fees, because they could fall into the category of suspected hacking, thereby giving the victim time to report.

On August 10, OpenSea also posted a new update that addresses the issue of copying someone else’s NFT and redistribution, aka copymint.

The exchange also claims to be able to resolve up to 90% of verification requests in just 1 hour, as well as detect and remove NFTs that copy others within 2 hours of reporting.

DISCLAIMER: The Information on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to do your own research before investing.

Join CoinCu Telegram to keep track of news: https://t.me/coincunews

Follow CoinCu Youtube Channel | Follow CoinCu Facebook page

Harold

CoinCu News